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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MATTHEW
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 27
@Mt
27:1-10. JESUS LED AWAY TO PILATE--REMORSE AND SUICIDE
OF JUDAS. ( = @Mr
15:1 Lu 23:1 Joh 18:28).
Jesus Led Away to Pilate (@Mt
27:1,2).
For the exposition of this portion, see on Joh
18:28, &c.
Remorse and Suicide of Judas (@Mt
27:3-10).
This portion is peculiar to Matthew. On the progress of
guilt in the traitor, see on Mr
14:1-11; Joh
13:21-30.
3. Then Judas, which had betrayed him, when he saw that
he was condemned--The condemnation, even though not
unexpected, might well fill him with horror. But perhaps
this unhappy man expected, that, while he got the bribe,
the Lord would miraculously escape, as He had once and
again done before, out of His enemies power: and if so,
his remorse would come upon him with all the greater
keenness.
repented himself--but,
as the issue too sadly showed, it was "the sorrow of
the world, which worketh death" (@2Co
7:10).
and brought again the
thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders--A
remarkable illustration of the power of an awakened
conscience. A short time before, the promise of this
sordid pelf was temptation enough to his covetous heart to
outweigh the most overwhelming obligations of duty and
love; now, the possession of it so lashes him that he
cannot use it, cannot even keep it!
4. Saying, I have sinned in that I have betrayed the
innocent blood--What a testimony this to Jesus! Judas
had been with Him in all circumstances for three years;
his post, as treasurer to Him and the Twelve (@Joh
12:6), gave him peculiar opportunity of watching the
spirit, disposition, and habits of his Master; while his
covetous nature and thievish practices would incline him
to dark and suspicious, rather than frank and generous,
interpretations of all that He said and did. If, then, he
could have fastened on one questionable feature in all
that he had so long witnessed, we may be sure that no such
speech as this would ever have escaped his lips, nor would
he have been so stung with remorse as not to be able to
keep the money and survive his crime.
And they said, What is
that to us? see thou to that--"Guilty or innocent
is nothing to us: We have Him now--begone!" Was ever
speech more hellish uttered?
5. And he cast down the pieces of silver--The
sarcastic, diabolical reply which he had got, in place of
the sympathy which perhaps he expected, would deepen his
remorse into an agony.
in the temple--the
temple proper, commonly called "the sanctuary,"
or "the holy place," into which only the priests
might enter. How is this to be explained? Perhaps he flung
the money in after them. But thus were fulfilled the words
of the prophet--"I cast them to the potter in the
house of the Lord" (@Zec
11:13).
and departed, and went
and hanged himself--For the details, see on Ac
1:18.
6. And the chief priests took the silver pieces, and
said, It is not lawful for to put them into the treasury--"the
Corban," or chest containing the money
dedicated to sacred purposes (see on Mt
15:5).
because it is the price
of blood--How scrupulous now! But those punctilious
scruples made them unconsciously fulfil the Scripture.
9. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy
the prophet, saying--(@Zec
11:12,13). Never was a complicated prophecy, otherwise
hopelessly dark, more marvellously fulfilled. Various
conjectures have been formed to account for Matthew's
ascribing to Jeremiah a prophecy found in the book of
Zechariah. But since with this book he was plainly
familiar, having quoted one of its most remarkable
prophecies of Christ but a few chapters before (@Mt
21:4,5), the question is one more of critical interest
than real importance. Perhaps the true explanation is the
following, from LIGHTFOOT: "Jeremiah of old had the
first place among the prophets, and hereby he comes to be
mentioned above all the rest in @Mt
16:14; because he stood first in the volume of the
prophets [as he proves from the learned DAVID KIMCHI]
therefore he is first named. When, therefore, Matthew
produceth a text of Zechariah under the name of JEREMY, he
only cites the words of the volume of the prophets under
his name who stood first in the volume of the prophets. Of
which sort is that also of our Saviour (@Lu
24:41), "All things must be fulfilled which are
written of Me in the Law, and the Prophets, and the
Psalms," or the Book of Hagiographa, in which the
Psalms were placed first."
@Mt
27:11-26. JESUS AGAIN BEFORE PILATE--HE SEEKS TO
RELEASE HIM BUT AT LENGTH DELIVERS HIM TO BE CRUCIFIED. (
= @Mr
15:1-15 Lu 23:1-25 Joh 18:28-40).
For the exposition, see on Lu
23:1-25; Joh
18:28-40.
@Mt
27:27-33. JESUS SCORNFULLY AND CRUELLY ENTREATED OF
THE SOLDIERS, IS LED AWAY TO BE CRUCIFIED. ( = @Mr
15:16-22 Lu 23:26-31 Joh 19:2,17).
For the exposition, see on Mr
15:16-22.
@Mt
27:34-50. CRUCIFIXION AND DEATH OF THE LORD JESUS. ( =
@Mr
15:25-37 Lu 23:33-46 Joh 19:18-30).
For the exposition, see on Joh
19:18-30.
@Mt
27:51-66. SIGNS AND CIRCUMSTANCES FOLLOWING THE DEATH
OF THE LORD JESUS--HE IS TAKEN DOWN FROM THE CROSS, AND
BURIED--THE SEPULCHRE IS GUARDED. ( = @Mr
15:38-47 Lu 23:47-56 Joh 19:31-42).
The Veil Rent (@Mt
27:51).
51. And, behold, the veil of the temple was rent in
twain from the top to the bottom--This was the thick
and gorgeously wrought veil which was hung between the
"holy place" and the "holiest of all,"
shutting out all access to the presence of God as
manifested "from above the mercy seat and from
between the cherubim"--"the Holy Ghost this
signifying, that the way into the holiest of all was not
yet made manifest" (@Heb
9:8). Into this holiest of all none might enter, not
even the high priest, save once a year, on the great day
of atonement, and then only with the blood of atonement in
his hands, which he sprinkled "upon and before the
mercy seat seven times" (@Le
16:14)--to signify that access for sinners to a
holy God is only through atoning blood. But as they
had only the blood of bulls and of goats, which could not
take away sins (@Heb
10:4), during all the long ages that preceded the
death of Christ the thick veil remained; the blood of
bulls and of goats continued to be shed and sprinkled; and
once a year access to God through an atoning sacrifice was
vouchsafed--in a picture, or rather, was dramatically
represented, in those symbolical actions--nothing
more. But now, the one atoning Sacrifice being
provided in the precious blood of Christ, access to this
holy God could no longer be denied; and so the moment the
Victim expired on the altar, that thick veil which for so
many ages had been the dread symbol of separation
between God and guilty men was, without a hand
touching it, mysteriously "rent in twain from top to
bottom"--"the Holy Ghost this signifying, that
the way into the holiest of all was NOW made
manifest!" How emphatic the statement, from top to
bottom; as if to say, Come boldly now to the Throne of
Grace; the veil is clean gone; the mercy seat
stands open to the gaze of sinners, and the way to it is
sprinkled with the blood of Him--"who through the
eternal Spirit hath offered Himself without spot to
God!" Before, it was death to go in, now it is
death to stay out. See more on this glorious
subject on @Heb
10:19-22.
An Earthquake--The Rocks Rent--The Graves Opened, that
the Saints Which Slept in Them Might Come Forth after
Their Lord's Resurrection (@Mt
27:51-53).
51. and the earth did quake--From what follows it
would seem that this earthquake was local, having for its
object the rending of the rocks and the opening of the
graves.
and the rocks rent--"were
rent"--the physical creation thus sublimely
proclaiming, at the bidding of its Maker, the concussion
which at that moment was taking place in the moral world
at the most critical moment of its history. Extraordinary
rents and fissures have been observed in the rocks near
this spot.
52. And the graves were opened; and many bodies of the
saints which slept arose--These sleeping saints (see
on 1Th
4:14) were Old Testament believers, who--according to
the usual punctuation in our version--were quickened into
resurrection life at the moment of their Lord's death, but
lay in their graves till His resurrection, when they came
forth. But it is far more natural, as we think, and
consonant with other Scriptures, to understand that only
the graves were opened, probably by the earthquake, at our
Lord's death, and this only in preparation for the
subsequent exit of those who slept in them, when the
Spirit of life should enter into them from their risen
Lord, and along with Him they should come forth, trophies
of His victory over the grave. Thus, in the opening of the
graves at the moment of the Redeemer's expiring, there was
a glorious symbolical proclamation that the death which
had just taken place had "swallowed up death in
victory"; and whereas the saints that slept in them
were awakened only by their risen Lord, to accompany Him
out of the tomb, it was fitting that "the Prince of
Life . . . should be the First that
should rise from the dead" (@Ac
26:23 1Co 15:20,23 Col 1:18 Re 1:5).
and went into the holy
city--that city where He, in virtue of whose
resurrection they were now alive, had been condemned.
and appeared unto many--that
there might be undeniable evidence of their own
resurrection first, and through it of their Lord's. Thus,
while it was not deemed fitting that He Himself should
appear again in Jerusalem, save to the disciples,
provision was made that the fact of His resurrection
should be left in no doubt. It must be observed, however,
that the resurrection of these sleeping saints was not
like those of the widow of Nain's son, of Jairus'
daughter, of Lazarus, and of the man who "revived and
stood upon his feet," on his dead body touching the
bones of Elisha (@2Ki
13:21)--which were mere temporary recallings of the
departed spirit to the mortal body, to be followed
by a final departure of it "till the trumpet shall
sound." But this was a resurrection once for all,
to life everlasting; and so there is no room to doubt
that they went to glory with their Lord, as bright
trophies of His victory over death.
The Centurion's Testimony (@Mt
27:54).
54. Now when the centurion--the military
superintendent of the execution.
and they that were with
him watching Jesus, saw the earthquake--or felt it and
witnessed its effects.
and those things that
were done--reflecting upon the entire transaction.
they feared greatly--convinced
of the presence of a Divine Hand.
saying, Truly this was
the Son of God--There cannot be a reasonable doubt
that this expression was used in the Jewish sense, and
that it points to the claim which Jesus made to be the Son
of God, and on which His condemnation expressly turned.
The meaning, then, clearly is that He must have been what
He professed to be; in other words, that He was no
impostor. There was no medium between those two. See, the
similar testimony of the penitent thief--"This man
hath done nothing amiss"--on @Lu
23:41.
The Galilean Women (@Mt
27:55,56).
55. And many women were there beholding afar off, which
followed Jesus--The sense here would be better brought
out by the use of the pluperfect, "which had followed
Jesus."
from Galilee,
ministering unto him--As these dear women had
ministered to Him during His glorious missionary tours in
Galilee (see on Lu
8:1-3), so from this statement it should seem that
they accompanied him and ministered to His wants from
Galilee on His final journey to Jerusalem.
56. Among which was Mary Magdalene--(See on Lu
8:2).
and Mary the mother of
James and Joses--the wife of Cleophas, or rather
Clopas, and sister of the Virgin (@Joh
19:25). See on Mt
13:55,56.
and the mother of
Zebedee's children--that is, Salome: compare @Mr
15:40. All this about the women is mentioned for the
sake of what is afterwards to be related of their
purchasing spices to anoint their Lord's body.
The Taking Down from the Cross and the Burial (@Mt
27:57-60).
For the exposition of this portion, see on Joh
19:38-42.
The Women Mark the Sacred Spot that They Might
Recognize It on Coming Thither to Anoint the Body (@Mt
27:61).
61. And there was Mary Magdalene, and the other Mary--"the
mother of James and Joses," mentioned before (@Mt
27:56).
sitting over against the
sepulchre--(See on Mr
16:1).
The Sepulchre Guarded (@Mt
27:62-66).
62. Now the next day, that followed the day of the
preparation--that is, after six o'clock of our Saturday
evening. The crucifixion took place on the Friday
and all was not over till shortly before sunset, when the
Jewish sabbath commenced; and "that sabbath day was
an high day" (@Joh
19:31), being the first day of the feast of unleavened
bread. That day being over at six on Saturday evening,
they hastened to take their measures.
63. Saying, Sir, we remember that that deceiver--Never,
remarks BENGEL, will you find the heads of the people
calling Jesus by His own name. And yet here there is
betrayed a certain uneasiness, which one almost fancies
they only tried to stifle in their own minds, as well as
crush in Pilate's, in case he should have any lurking
suspicion that he had done wrong in yielding to them.
said, while he was yet
alive--Important testimony this, from the lips of His
bitterest enemies, to the reality of Christ's death;
the corner-stone of the whole Christian religion.
After three days--which,
according to the customary Jewish way of reckoning, need
signify no more than "after the commencement of the
third day."
I will rise again--"I
rise," in the present tense, thus reporting not only
the fact that this prediction of His had reached
their ears, but that they understood Him to look forward confidently
to its occurring on the very day named.
64. Command therefore that the sepulchre be made sure--by
a Roman guard.
until the third day--after
which, if He still lay in the grave, the imposture of His
claims would be manifest to all.
and say unto the people,
he is risen from the dead--Did they really fear this?
so the last error shall
be worse than the first--the imposture of His
pretended resurrection worse than that of His pretended
Messiahship.
65. Pilate said unto them, Ye have a watch--The
guards had already acted under orders of the Sanhedrim,
with Pilate's consent; but probably they were not clear
about employing them as a night watch without Pilate's
express authority.
go your way, make it as
sure as ye can--as ye know how, or in the way ye deem
securest. Though there may be no irony in this speech, it
evidently insinuated that if the event should be
contrary to their wish, it would not be for want of
sufficient human appliances to prevent it.
66. So they went, and made the sepulchre sure, sealing
the stone--which Mark (@Mr
16:4) says was "very great."
and setting a watch--to
guard it. What more could man do? But while they are
trying to prevent the resurrection of the Prince of Life,
God makes use of their precautions for His own ends. Their
stone-covered, seal-secured sepulchre shall preserve the
sleeping dust of the Son of God free from all indignities,
in undisturbed, sublime repose; while their watch shall be
His guard of honor until the angels shall come to take
their place.
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